The altitude at which you are making measurements must be considered when examining the boiling point.
Yes, melting is the process of a solid turning into a liquid while boiling turns a liquid into a gas.Added:The last (boiling point) is always higher than the first mentioned melting point.
Everything would boil quickly, and almost everything is made of water.
it can be made to boil at 105 degrees Celsius if we add impurities to it,as impurities raise the boiling point.
Steam is the gaseous form of water above its boiling point. When you see 'steam', that is not really steam, it's warm-water droplets in the air.
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When made of pure iron: boiling point: 3134 K (2862 °C or 5182 °F)
Opal is not a compound but a mixture, and so, its boiling point will depend on its exact composition. However, opals are mainly made of silica, whose boiling point is 2230 deg C.
By heating up above boiling point (at normal pressure)
It was the boiling point to start the revolutionary war
yes they can be differentiated by there boiling point . now u would have a question that if they are made up of the same things then why ? it is because that they have different stucture which makes the difference
Tungsten itself is an element.It has the highest boiling point.
Magnesium sulfate has a high melting and boiling point, as it is made of Ionic bonds which are very strong. A lot of energy is needed to break them. So ionic compounds have high melting and boiling points. See related link for more information.
Steam is the gaseous form of water above its boiling point. When you see 'steam', that is not really steam, it's warm-water droplets in the air.
Mothballs are usually made of naphthalene. Naphthalene has a boiling point of aroun 218oC (424oF).
considerations that should be made for Commericial off the shelf procurement
By boiling the substance, you can compare the actual boiling point of water in given conditions to that of the sample. However, analogues can be made which will have an identical boiling point, yet contain little or no water at all. Hence, boiling alone cannot ascertain what something is. This holds for all physical tests - you must use chemical tests as well to determine exactly what composes a sample.
It only boils at 100 degrees Celsius because Anders Celsius chose the boiling point of water to be a reference point on his new metric scale. The freezing point of water was his other reference point.